Moms Clean Air Force staff and members launch the “Let’s Get Rolling” summer tour to build support for clean, electric school buses, and made news on climate issues throughout the country!
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Moms Make News: “Let’s Get Rolling” Electric School Bus Tour Launches
Drought, the Climate Emergency That Threatens Everything
Can you imagine a day when you turn on your tap and not a drop of water comes out? If the warming trend continues, the Western drought is a preview of this climate emergency.
Moms Make News: All Aboard the Electric School Bus
Moms Clean Air Force staff and members help reinstate methane protections and made news on climate issues throughout the country!
Moms Make News: Elevating Juneteenth
Read how Moms Clean Air Force staff and members made news throughout the country!
Moms Make News: Moms Rally Support for Methane Protections
Read how Moms Clean Air Force staff and members made news throughout the country!
40% of Americans Breathe Polluted Air
The American Lung Association State of the Air 2021 report found more than 40 % of Americans live with unhealthy air and more…
Wildfire Smoke Found More Toxic Than Other Forms of Air Pollution for Kids
Children are “especially vulnerable” to wildfire smoke. New study finds wildfire smoke more toxic than other forms of air pollution.
Moms Make News: Black Maternal Health and Climate Action this Black History Month
Moms Clean Air Force staff and members made news throughout the country!
Breathe Deep Montana
Fire season has gotten longer, more intense, and more difficult during the pandemic, says a mom of three who can’t let her kids go out to play because the air quality is so dangerous.
The Power of Our Voices and Our Votes: Moms Make News September 11 – September 25, 2020
Moms Clean Air Force staff and members made news throughout the country!
More Americans Breathe Unhealthy Air. How Does Your State Stack Up?
The 2020 State of the Air report, released by the American Lung Association, found more people are breathing unhealthy air compared to last year. Despite decades of progress, the trend lines are now headed in the wrong direction.
Montana Climate Assessment: Interview with Cathy Whitlock
Cathy Whitlock, the lead author of the Montana Climate Assessment, says: “We see from the paleo record that any time conditions have gotten warmer in Montana, there have been more fires.” And with fire comes consequences – asthma and other respiratory problems.